$ i lrimiiiii! I: x i 8 THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM. OREGON SUNDAY MORNlfccT OCTOBER 2, 1921 i r 1 (Old White Corner) Salem, Oregon Salem's Greatest Women's Amjarel Store LOWER PRICES QW WO M EN -S E) R ESS ES Salem's Greatest Women's Apparel Store announces for Monday an extraordinary sale of women's high-class dresses, at the lowest prices of the season, including wool serge, velour, tricotine, messaline and taf feta silk, newest and best styles at wonderful price reductions, $12.50 to $15.00 dresses " : r $9.75 f$16.50 now offered for.. And $22.50 to $25.00 Dresses...-.....,. Attractive New Fall Skirts Great variety of new wool skirts, such as you'll want to wear this season with pretty wool sweaters, middy blouses or separate coats, made of fine quality wool velours, homespun! and wor steds in plaids, stripes, some are neatly pleated and have attrac tive pockets ranging in price from L $6.75 up to $15,00 Wool Sweaters Medium and heavy Shetland Wool Sweaters, including Flare, Tuxedo and Sport models, plain or fancy weaves, some made with belts, - others with sashes, j principally m ! plain col ors... .., . ; $2.98 to $0.50 Remarkable Values in Women's arid Girl's COATS arid SUITS $30jOO to $35j00 Coats j Now $24 JO f. J t t ii . hi A- W. ,'!.'.-v ! v"; ' f -. ('' t J ' ( ' '" ill Beautiful garments from best makers.! Wool velours, plushes, burellas, tweeds and other wanted materials. Belted or fiemi-fitting models. All leading colors. $37 JO to $45.00 Coats Now $31.75 Smart new. belted loose back Coats with large convertible collars in round or square effects; new plaited styles and military models in latest; designs. Cheviots, velour, mel tons, burellas and mixtures All sizes and leading colors. ; : $50J00 to $60S)0 Coats now $37 JO Every coat in this lot is of superior quality -the jfabrics are new and desirable, the styles are uncommonly smart, the ' workmanship of the best. These garments' came to us at ;an advantageous price and, we have marked them to sell at a substantial saving to our customers. ; : w - . SUIT SALE atlORDIMARY $Z7J0 Suits Now Offered at $19 JO Some are plain tailored modejs. Others in novelty styles. Many with large collars trimmed with furs and plush. Some trimmed with braid; materials are serges, broadcloths, bur ellas, velours, gabardines and mixtures, in prevailing colors. $32 JO to $40.00 Suits Now $24.75 Handsome suits embracing many desirable style features fa vored by the devotees of fashion. These splendid garments, go skillfully designed and carefully tailored, will win instant approval from . women desirous of adhering closely to the prevailing modes. Though faultless in style, fit and quality, they have been especially underpriced for this event j $45.00 and $50.00 Suits Now $34.75 j There are so many beautiful new; models that it, is impossible to describe them in detail. Suffice to say every new and pop ular style for winter is represented. Suits of burellas, serges, velours, velvets, broadcloths, poplins and novelty I mixtures. Braid and fur trimmed models. j : i : -Flannel Middy Blouses $6.75 Goody Middy Blouses of red, navy and black flannel, smart, new styles for school wear, several different models to select from. j-v. ;:.-, ' . ..:,;t : UY NOW turs were never destined to be in greater de mand, than for this coming season, conse quently we made s elaborate K preparations months ago for fall and winter business, tak ing unusual, care in selecting the furs and making sure that the workmanship and styles were right. f Fashion demands a fur neckpiece for the frock or, suit, consequently we, have assem bled at Salem's greatest women'3 apparel store, a varied snowing of handsome furs at money-saving prices. I . '1. Economy Department Where lower Prices .Prevail "' Nothing Over $25.00 . Araaal Sale of TRIMMED HATS ( phenomenal .talfl i younf Udiri' md vtrntni I trimmed hu eer known la Salem. C1eer new thapn i mnu, Ttmin, plain, Drrr, etc. TarDana ana irg. rivet hl ar included, man are neatly trtmiB4 with wines, ostrich feathera, ribbona and new distinctive orna- - meata. The aurtmnt ineladea email, mediam and; Isrce ( ahapea, blark and all the leading color. ; Te make eelec tioae easr we will arrance all hate ap to 915 ia. three let oa ear table and eboweasea, aa followa: ; Trimmed U, -worth regular up to t4.50..: - oaie rrice.... -.y5 "' Trimmed Haia, worth ' retular 1S ; Sale Price...J4,75 I Trimmed Bata worth regular 99 ti 10.50 - ; -1llce-r $6.75-S MISSES' and WOMEM'S UTIUTY ? COATS $18.75 At this price we have an j excellent range of coats, all designed not only for "fcerrlce but also for looks. Smart Coats, with wide belts, large collars and pockets; some trimmed with far or plash. . Coats with loose back or with gathers". Dozenrof new styles. Meltons, kerseys, cheviots, burellas and veltets.1 Extra good Taloe. V-ii WOMl'Sahd : COAJS $16.50 New, belted and- plain back styles. Some with large collars and self-colored buttons.- - Coats suitable for street, school or motoring. All sic es. 'Materials are yelours,' plash, meltons, etc-. SWIM CHA Stretch of Water Between tEngland and France Is Temptation ONLY TWO HAVE WON Burgess Made Wonderful Effort, Covering 60 Miles In 22 Hours LEIJE TELLS SOVIET'S AIMS Russia Could Not Get Along Without Central Form of j Trade Control PRODUCTION IS AIDED Concessions Bring in Out side Capital in Develop ing Natural Resources NEW YORK. Spnr failure of Henry Sullivan nV tw. ell, Mass., to swim the English tuuu in ma rourtn attempt, re calls the efforts Of swimmers from all corners of the world to accompusn tne reat. Only twice in history has the restless stretch of water riven way to the efforts of aquatic stars. in jsia uaptain Matthew Webb, an Englishman, crosses from Uov er to Calais in 21 hours, 35 min utes, lie was layored by a light wind and a comparative calm actually swimnVng about 32 miles' mms lause Trouble The distance across tho rhan- nel at the narrowest point. Dover ro tape uris TsezJ a French head land in the Pas e Calais, is about 20 miles but swimmers are com pelled to sig-zag in combatting the waves and tides. The second successful attempt to cross the channel was made September 6, 1911, by William r. Burpess, and Englishman by birth, but a naturalized French man. Fifteen times previously he had attempted to make the peril ous swim. On the sixteenth he swam from South Foreland, Dov r, to Le Chatelat, a little village two miles east of Cape Grls Nez, in 22 hours and 35 minutes. He covered about 60 miles. Terrific Struggle Burgess feat was considered even more wonderful than that of Captain Webb, in' that he met with the most adverse conditions. In mid-channel he was stung se verely by a jelly-fish and became ill and was ready to abandon the swim. When but a short distance of the French coast he met the ebbing tides and battled for three hours before reaching slack wa-j ten ! I Two other men said to have ac-1 complished the feat i could not prove their claims. Captain Da vis Dalton, of New York, declared he swam the channel in August, 1890, covering 60 miles in 23 hours, 30 minutes. He claimed to have swam the entire distance on his back, and to have been so blinded by salt water that his sight was impaired for months af terward, i ' i : ; Sam Mahoney, of Revere Beaeh. Mass., asserted that he swam from Sangatee, Franee to South Fore land, in September, 1908 but this was not proved. Veteran Tries Again. ' Jabez Wolfe, the veteran Eng lish swimmer has made 21 un successful attempts to cross and is planning another. In Septem ber, 190$, he arrived within sight of the Calais pier but became ill and was taken from the water. He had besni in the water 23 hours. In August of 1908, James Mearns, Scottish swimming cham pion, nearly lost his life in the swim. He was ill and drowning when rescued by friends in mid channel. Montagu Holbein, of England, tried seven times to cross. In 1903 he arrived within a mile ot Dover after swimming 22 hours 21 minutes, giving up because ot exhaustion. Kellerman Fails Annette Ksllerman, a native born Australian, called the world's greatest woman swimmer, success, i She is now a citetaolsr made several attempts without success. She now is a citizen of the United States. Rose Pitonof, of Boston, went to England in 1912 with the avowed purpose of conquering the channel waves bat nevgc found conditions favorable anorreturned to America. - A. Many others of lesser ndte have tried and failed. Sullivan as de- LONDON, Sept. 24. In, the first number of the new Labotf Monthly, Premier Lenine explaifci the discovery of the Soviet gov4 ernment of Russia that it could not get along without capitalisin in some form and why it has conu promised on what it calls "staW capitalism." ! "State capitalism," he says. "4 incomparably higher economically than our present economic sys tern that is one point; and sec ondly there is nothing in it thai is terrible for the Soviet govern ment, for the Soviet state is a state which guarantees power to the workers and the poor. h i - Instances Given "One of the simplest cases o examples of how the Soviet gorj ernment guides the development of capitalism along the path cJ state capitalism of how plants state capitalism is con cessions. Everybody now agrees that concessions are necessary but not everybody, fully appret ciates the significance of conces sions. "The Soviet government se- cures the advantage in the forra of the development of productiTe forces and an increase in the quantity of products available Immediately or within a short period. We have, say, hundreds of enterorises. mines, forests, etc. we cannot develop them all; we! have not enough machinery, iooo or transport. Strengthens Soviet "In 'planting state capitalism in the form ot concessions, the Soviet government strengthens large production against small production, the advanced against the backward, machine produc tion against hand production. It increases the quantity of products of large industry in its hands and strengthens the state regulation of economic relations as a counter-balance to the petty bour geoise, anarchistic relations. ;( Plans Are Received for New PoStoffice Addition .1: Plans for the new building to be erected a few feet east of the postoffice in Salem were , received yesterday and ewill receive ttie approval of Auguset HuckesBeia. postmaster.; The new; building, 30 by 50 feet, will give the postoffice 1500 square feetj of working room, in addition to the present working space of 1350 feet. The building will be erected about five feet from the present structure, fith the driveway ex tending 4 5 feet to the east of the new -building. The main advantage in the new building will be in giving the mail workers sufficient working room, and avoiding the necessity ot jtarrrfngi all 'xnall ttpstklrs. . as is done "with; the pi estsnt cramped quarters. i- d rf " When the, new driveway is com-J plcted, those jshoj , toj the postoffice In autos will find it neartr 'to tnicatranci & up. on the State street tide. la. stead.; ot using the drjjvcway. r: r . Sunday Joy riders maice gita; y, heart of the undertake, j " LADD & BUSH, BANKE1 T'a : i Established 18G3 J . ... General Banking Business if Office Hcurs from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. B 1 i i n i E ' clared he will maKe another try in September. Omer Perrault, of Canada and TiraboBchi, the Ital ian swimmer, are training for tue event. 0SB01E FILES CROSS C0W1PLA1NT Man Who Ran Into Ramp Car Asks Judgment from plaintiff of 6$,266 Envirdnmentl The surroundings in which! men work have a big lnflu-1 ence on how they work, and what ithey produce. J Sunshine, good air, roomi-l ness, cleanliness, and proper equipment combine to makej an environment that is con- dncive to good work. j This is another reason whyj we can guarantee ) the ser-l ice we render, 1 MORRIS lOPTICAIi CO. 204-211 Salem Bank of Commerce Building Oregon's Largest Optical 1 lnotltution E. G. Osborne, who has beeni ! sued by M. S. Ramp for damages sustained when the Pierce-Arrow car of Osborne crashed into the Ramp car on the Pacific highway, July 2, seriously injuring Mr. Ramp and wife and their 3-year-old son, has filed his answer to the complaint. Osborne cnarges Ramp with driving across the Pacific high way in a careless and negligent, manner and in not keeping a look out. Also he claims that Ramp was driving at SO miles an hour Lwhen he drove from the side of the road leading" from Brooks onto tie Pacific highway. I Because Ramp was driving with his family across the Pacific highway at a speed of 30 miles an hour, Osborne alleges it caus ed a collision with Osborne's car, resulting in Osborne being drag ged from his car, sustaining a fractured collar bone, several broken ribs and injuring his right kidney. Osborne alleges that his car was damaged to the extent or $150, tnat he had to. pay an $84 hospital bill, and a doctor bill of $82, and that , he lost three months ot his time, valued at $810. j Osborne also asks for $50.00 general damages, estimating his total damage as a result of the accident, at $6,266 and asks the curt for judgment against Mr. Ramp for this amount. i Mr. Ramn sued Mr. Osborne for $?,900 damages as a repult of be ing run into by Osborne's car. itemizing his damages as $100 hospital fee, $250 for doctor's bill, $100 for loss of time, $450 for damage on car and $3,000 general damages. 1 Civil Cases Are Listed For This Week in Court Civil cases to be tried next week in the Marion county cir cuit court are ae follows: . Oct. 4 Van Lydiagrat vs. Hil debrand. 9 a. m.; Stickney vs. Wortham, 1 p. m. Oct. 5 Houghara vs. City or ML Angel; Horst vs. City of Mt. An eel. " ; ' Oct. 7 Furrier vs. . Martin; 9 ai m.; Rosemaa vs. Lansing, 1 p. nL ' rv '-!'- " Oct 10 Salem Hardware com pany vs. Taylor, and Salem Tile Ac Mercantile company ts. same lefendant Oct. 11 Beardsley vs. Taylor M. Ukey vs. Grasclose & Rhoten. - Oct. 13 Toung'va. Feidt.-? Oct. 13 Becke TSt Richards, T VISIT THE NEW v Where Buying Is a Pleasure STDR s if ii Toilet Articles Colgate's TOOtH PASTE at per tube 8c ODORONO small size bottle at 23c USTKRlXE ( ! ' - medium size bottle at 49c , i IrixsoI I I fori the family washing at plr 8c Colgate's TALCTSI POWDEK at per can 15c ODOROXO medium size bottle at 43 c William's SHAVING SOAP t at per bar j USTKRIXB . i large size i ; botUe at I 89c LUX I the soap in flakes, at per bfz box fl 10c ODOROXO large size bottle at 79. CRKMB OIL SOAI j at per bar ;i 8c ODO-RO-S O Depilatory ' J at -I 79c Prophylactic TOOTH BRUSHES at each 39c L1STERENB ' f small sixe Vottles at 25c PEARS f UNSCENTED SOAP ; a6 per bar '- i ISc. TWEfK WASHES and dyes afe the aametimeai- 8c Hair Nets, at each .......... Furist Hair Curlers, at each. ........ ' " I i .. . - .; : 1 , Small Hair Curlers, at each. . . . . . '. . Needle Pointed Pins, at per pkg...... Silk Embroidery Floss, at per skein. . . . t - -1 ' - Hooks and Eyes at per package ...... Lingerie Braid, silk finish, at per pkg.. Novelty Braid, at per package. . Snap Fasteners, best grade, at per pkg. Military Braid, at per yd, 10c, 15c, 20c and Invisible : Hair Pins, at per pkg. ...... lUc Electric Hair Curlers Nickle Silver Thimbles "at each. ..... Shoe Laces, at per pair.......... Hump Hair Pins, at per pkg, 5c and Yankee Curlers, at ............... " t '-.'!': Featherbone, at per yard, 10c and; . . . I Baby Hickory Garters at ...... .i. ... . i r: I Hickory Shoulder Brace, and garters at Dr.,Parkfer'8 Waist and garters at. . . . . ; " . ' i i !; ' " i i - Pearl Buttons at per card........... V I. - 'i,..:'. : ,;': Clark's 6.N.T. Lustre Cotton, at each. ' s . .' " Dressing; Combs in assorted colors ; at each ..-.'..w... Spool Cotton, 160-yard spools. at each. 19c 10 c 5c 5 c 10c 25 c 10 c 25c 5c 10 c ' i 5c .... 5c .. 10c 15c 15 c 10c 50c 50c ! 5c f5c 35c 5c ! Dexter's Embroidery Cotton, at each. I 5c 10c 50c Hair Bow Fasteners, at each.. Hair Brushes with aluminum face, at each U ..... v. Fancy Washable Edgetrim Braid. 1 1 a- Pkg. ia colors, per Transparent Hair Pins,, per pkg., .... 25c - j- j ' . - ' J J, : Collar Bands, at each.w. ... !10c Silk: Cord, at per; yard .V.. J;.' I T .Jt .V. i Lead Pencils, best quality, ' at each ........4:. Barrettes, at each 8c 5c 19c : Braid, in L-t n age .... . i-f. . . I lwv Side Combs, at per pair r..... i .... 25c 5c. 3c 5c 1 floe Washabzle Rlc-Rac colors, per package Bone Crochet Hooks, at each... T.. Darning Cotton, in colors, at each.., f worsted naming rnreaa, at each 4 1. Silk Darning Thread, at tacK Fancy Elastic, at per yard. Fleischer's Knittilng, Yarn, at per; skein Wool Powder" Paffs, at eacn. . ..t '( I Velour Powder Puffs, at each StockingDarners,;at each... Sterling Lingerie Clasps, y at per pair; . . . . . . . . Tatting Shuttles, at each.r.-r Wy I" C Oc . . .. jC ........ ! in- . I Jk V 0 ..llf.;. iSOc Steel Knitting Needles, at. perj set i 'I -I Come in and see the extraordinary: our Fcrciire Department at Closinz1 Ont Piice$! I .Everyglto'liiniisli a hone. r v : Farnitare Depart meni. zna. x itwr Worth & Gray Depa rtment "Successors to V W Moore 177 North Liberty Street Stoi e Salea0r(c:a r t 1 ;